Too many of my clients are "staying away from carbs." One woman, an Ironman triathlete, was trying to train on a diet based on protein powder, almond butter, egg whites, and chicken, with a few spinach salads and apples on the side. No wonder she was struggling to complete her workouts! Her diet was short on wholesome grains that can easily fuel her muscles and help her perform at a high level.

The definition of that "enemy" carbohydrate varies from person to person. For some folks, carbs means bagels, bread, and pasta. For others, carbs means any food made with white flour and sugar. For me, carbs includes grains, fruits, vegetables and all forms of sugars and starches. They all digest into glucose, feed the brain, and get stored as glycogen in the muscles. If you eat too few carbs, your muscles will feel needlessly fatigued.

As I mentioned in my Carbohydrate Confusion article[1], some popular diet books, including The Paleo Diet, Grain Brain, and Wheat Belly, have convinced many active people to avoid carbohydrate-rich foods. The authors paint the picture that carbs are inflammatory, fattening, and bad for you. Their hype fails to clearly explain that the anti-carb message is not appropriate for athletes who are lean, fit & healthy.

The carbs-are-bad messages really should be targeted only at the masses of overfat, sedentary people who consume excessive amounts of calories, often from sweets and treats. For those unfit (often unhealthy) people, excess carbohydrate can contribute to elevated blood glucose, which triggers the body to secrete extra insulin. Consistently high insulin can be inflammatory and lead to nasty health problems. Yet, athletes can handle carbs with far less insulin than the average American-and without carbs causing "sugar crashes" or weight gain.

Carbs for athletes

For athletes who routinely train hard 4 to 6 days a week, carbs enhance performance and should be the foundation of each meal. The International Olympic Committee's research-based recommendations for an optimal sports diet include far more carbs than you may realize:

Amount of Exercise

Gram carb/lb body weight

Gram carb/kg

Moderate exercise (~1 hour/day

2.5 to 3

5 - 7

Endurance exercise (1-3 hours/day)

2.5 to 4.5

6 - 10

Extreme exercise (>4.5 hours/day)

3.5 to 5.5

8 - 12

So what does this recommendation look like in terms of food? For a 150-lb person who trains hard an hour a day and remains somewhat active the rest of the day (that is, does more than just sit in front of a computer for 8 hours), this comes to 375 to 450 grams of carbohydrate per day, the equivalent of 1,500 to 1,800 calories of carbs. This is more than a few blueberries, a spinach salad, and a pile of broccoli!

While I suspect many of you are rolling your eyes right now and thinking, "My body (or my young athlete's) is different from everyone else's. I could never eat that many carbs without getting fat," believe it or not, this is an appropriate intake. Here's how that 150-lb athlete might want to evenly distribute carbs throughout the day. Notice how this menu sharply contrasts with the low-carb menus I commonly see: breakfast: protein shake; lunch: salad+chicken; afternoon snack: almonds; dinner: pile of veggies+protein; then evening snacks, often uncontrollable.

TIME

MEAL

CARB (g)

SAMPLE MEAL

g carb/food item

6:30 am

Pre-exercise snack

40

Clif bar

40

7:30 am

Post-exercise breakfast

110

1 cup dry oatmeal

cooked in 1 cup milk

extra large (9") banana

drizzle of honey

handful (22) almonds

55

10

40

10

5

11:30

Early lunch

125

Turkey sandwich

fruit yogurt

4 fig newtons

40

30

55

3:30

Snack

45

Trail mix (nuts, raisins)

latte with lowfat milk

35

10

7:30

Dinner

110

Protein +2 cups brown rice

1.5 cups cooked carrots

90

20

If these meals look "fattening" to you, please notice, that I have not included any snacks before and after dinner on crackers or sweets. Nor are there food binges every three days when the athlete succumbs to devouring a whole bag of chocolate chip cookies. This plan offers a hefty dose of carbs and calories throughout the active part of the athlete's day, when the body needs the fuel.

Replacing grains with fruits and veggies

Grain-phobics, take note: If you have sworn off bagels for breakfast, here's what you need to put in your fruit smoothie to replace the 60 grams of carbohydrates in a 300-calorie Dunkin' Donuts-size bagel:

16 medium strawberries + 1 cup blueberries + 1 medium banana

If you have nixed your lunchtime sandwich and pretzels, here's how many veggies you need in your salad to replace the 62 g carbs from 2 slices (220 calories) wholesome bread and a 100-calorie bag of pretzels:

Alternatively, you could heap a whole cup of chickpeas on top of the greens. Either way, you end up with a pile of food that is time consuming to eat if you are a busy athlete.

No more pasta for dinner? To replace those two cups of happiness (1/4 of a 16-oz box dry pasta=84 g carb), you'd need to eat this many veggies to fully refuel your muscles and load them up for the next day's workout:

The bottom line

Wholesome grains play a helpful role in a sports diet. While fruits and veggies offer some carbs, you need to eat lots of them to compensate for lack of grains. Your efforts to eat healthfully might end up contributing to a sports diet that fails to support hard training. Please, fuel wisely!

Boston-area sports nutritionist Nancy Clark, MS, RD counsels both casual and competitive athletes. Her office is in Newton, MA (617-795-1875). For information about her best-selling Sports Nutrition Guidebook (5th edition), see www.nancyclarkrd.com[2]. For online education with CEUs, see www.sportsnutritionworkshop.com[3].

Teaser title:

Should Athletes Really Avoid Carbs?

Teaser image:

Teaser text:

For athletes who routinely train hard 4 to 6 days a week, carbs enhance
performance and should be the foundation of each meal. Research-based recommendations for an optimal
sports diet include far more carbs than you may realize, says sports nutrition expert Nancy Clark.